Where did it all begin, my first cars sort of started before I had a first car, this is a story of madness and now I see in retrospect huge understanding from both my parents and one of my brothers.
Like many kids of my generation my first driving started on my father’s lap, he did the work I held the steering wheel, it was fun and led me to a life of a never ending interest in cars.
Back to basics, I was lucky my parents had 2 cars, don’t get me wrong we were not rich, we lived in a rented house out in the country and the cars were not in the first flush of use. My father’s first car, he bought it at a garage, the seller took him for a spin, showed him the controls, my Dad bought his license at the Post Office and promptly drove from the south coast of England up to Scotland to meet his uncle George. With first cars today it is very different!
When I was 14 the 2 cars were an Austin Sheerline (the Ezine Article would not accept this so it shows Princess instead, similar but definitely not the same!!) and a Morris Minor convertible. On one occasion, they were out in the Morris and I decided to drive the Austin around the house, well when I drove it back into the garage, I drove into the garage wall, being good I reversed out, inspected the damage and as it was not bad, I turned the car around and promptly reversed back into the garage wall!
It got worse and better, later that day, I drove the Morris into a wall too, but fortunately for me my eldest brother told my Dad it was him. It is odd to think that as regards first cars I got one before he did and passed my driving test before him although he is 8 years older than me.
And what was my first car? I could say it was an Austin A35 van, it felt like mine as I drove it everywhere, but in reality it was my Dad’s. The van actually ended life as a greenhouse, the engine just stopped working, but a very fine greenhouse it was.
First cars! Mine was a wait for it, it was bought off Mr Benz of Greater London for £90, it broke down on the way home across London, it was truly wonderful, I still have the official workshop manual, a definite necessity. The car was an off-white 1959 Jaguar 2.4 litre, to me at the time the best car in the World.
Often the brakes failed, stopping with the handbrake was nothing new for me, first gear and reverse were very close together, too close, when at lights on more than one occasion I went flying backwards not forwards.
First cars should be cheap to run, insurable, often dull is a good point, not my Jag, this was wonderful. I would be working on it (again) and the police would question me on whether it was mine, I tell you no criminal in his right mind would have stolen it, it would have been better to walk than expect it to go anywhere. I loved it.
My first car was keen on petrol, oil, tyres, brake failure and suspect electrics, it would go wrong as soon as I looked at it. But the smell getting in was glorious, the chunk of the doors, the smell of leather, wood, out of all the first cars in the World mine was the best, best, best.
I will return with more first cars type stories, in the meantime, please, please, please wear your seat belt.
Friday 10 October 2008
Tuesday 30 September 2008
First car
This little article is for the many youngsters who are about to buy their first car. If you thought the cost of learning to drive was pricey, owning a car is more.
Let’s take a look at what is needed to buy your first car. Money of course but there are other important considerations, insurance, road tax, maintenance, fuel and safety.
We will look at each one. Insurance, if you are 18 and want to drive a sports car as your first car, well for some reason insurance companies are not keen to do business with you and those that are will only do so for vast amounts of money, so vast the insurance will probably cost more than the car itself.
So we won’t bother with insurance then, bad move, it is better to be car less than not insured. If your first car happens to run into another car, your fault or theirs and you are uninsured, the law will find you guilty on many counts, to use a pun ‘Let’s not go down that road’.
We will be practical, look at the insurance group ratings, the lower the rating the lower the insurance, your first car will still be expensive to insure for the first few years but the cost can be spread over a year, knowing the cost will help with your monthly budget.
If you own a four wheel drive tank, road tax license is very expensive, but some of the smaller cars can even be tax free, make sure your first car is in the lowest tax bracket possible. As an aside if you buy a car which is over 25 years old, that is also free of road tax, but don’t even think about it! (Car parts, servicing are much more expensive normally).
Maintenance. Cars even your lovely first car will need a service sometimes, nowadays anything from 10k miles to 20k miles and the cost is much lower for a Nissan Micra than an Aston Martin! Other items to bear in mind are tyres and brakes, they do wear and will need replacing, (I will write at another time about good driving skills that save on wear and tear).
Fuel economy is an essential thing to look into, the more miles you get to the gallon in your first car the better for you, obviously the cheaper the cost. Use the manufacturer’s figures for guidance, they are not infallible but good enough.
And finally safety, the more airbags the better. My advice is don’t buy your first car without it having a steering wheel air bag. Make sure it has its servicing history, this ticks the right box about how the car has been looked after and please, please, please wear your seat belt at all times.
All the best, choose your first car with your head, not your heart.
Let’s take a look at what is needed to buy your first car. Money of course but there are other important considerations, insurance, road tax, maintenance, fuel and safety.
We will look at each one. Insurance, if you are 18 and want to drive a sports car as your first car, well for some reason insurance companies are not keen to do business with you and those that are will only do so for vast amounts of money, so vast the insurance will probably cost more than the car itself.
So we won’t bother with insurance then, bad move, it is better to be car less than not insured. If your first car happens to run into another car, your fault or theirs and you are uninsured, the law will find you guilty on many counts, to use a pun ‘Let’s not go down that road’.
We will be practical, look at the insurance group ratings, the lower the rating the lower the insurance, your first car will still be expensive to insure for the first few years but the cost can be spread over a year, knowing the cost will help with your monthly budget.
If you own a four wheel drive tank, road tax license is very expensive, but some of the smaller cars can even be tax free, make sure your first car is in the lowest tax bracket possible. As an aside if you buy a car which is over 25 years old, that is also free of road tax, but don’t even think about it! (Car parts, servicing are much more expensive normally).
Maintenance. Cars even your lovely first car will need a service sometimes, nowadays anything from 10k miles to 20k miles and the cost is much lower for a Nissan Micra than an Aston Martin! Other items to bear in mind are tyres and brakes, they do wear and will need replacing, (I will write at another time about good driving skills that save on wear and tear).
Fuel economy is an essential thing to look into, the more miles you get to the gallon in your first car the better for you, obviously the cheaper the cost. Use the manufacturer’s figures for guidance, they are not infallible but good enough.
And finally safety, the more airbags the better. My advice is don’t buy your first car without it having a steering wheel air bag. Make sure it has its servicing history, this ticks the right box about how the car has been looked after and please, please, please wear your seat belt at all times.
All the best, choose your first car with your head, not your heart.
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